The Man from Auntie (Series 2)
Ben Elton · 1994 · BBC1
High-speed stand-up and occasional sketches from a nineties television fixture.
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Ben Elton spends the second series of The Man From Auntie doing exactly what made him a television fixture in the early nineties. He grips a microphone and delivers high-speed, left-leaning observational comedy. The BBC vehicle is structured as a half-hour of rapid-fire stand-up interrupted by a handful of sketches, built to showcase a comic whose delivery rarely drops below a sprint.
Broadcast in 1994, Series 2 pulled heavily from his recent Very Live tour. By this point, he was an established commodity, having reshaped British television as a writer on The Young Ones and Blackadder. Here, he operates entirely as a frontman. His routines swing between political complaints and everyday annoyances, taking shots at the Conservative government and Noel’s House Party alongside rants about magnetic plastic fruit and unabsorbent napkins. The show captures a specific moment in British entertainment when the alternative comedy boom comfortably settled into prime-time broadcasting.